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1 posted on 07/08/2014 6:44:44 AM PDT by InvisibleChurch
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To: InvisibleChurch

Why would anyone care about Hilary Clinton’s memoirs? I mean I can understand if it was like Teddy Roosevelt...he can talk about his exploits with the Rough Riders or Grant’s memoirs. But Hilary Clinton? What has she done that’s worth that many pages?


2 posted on 07/08/2014 6:46:39 AM PDT by Borges
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To: InvisibleChurch
Of that lot, the only one I have read was Hawking ... and I was thoroughly unimpressed. The rest look like several hours of my life that I would never get back.

Currently reading "Enemies Foreign and Domestic".

6 posted on 07/08/2014 6:54:11 AM PDT by NorthMountain
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To: InvisibleChurch
A mathematics professor has singled out which books are our most 'unread'

Math professor? Sounds like he's got an axe to grind with the English department.

9 posted on 07/08/2014 6:57:08 AM PDT by Spirochete (GOP: Give Obama Power)
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To: InvisibleChurch

Hmm. I read the Kahnemann book cover to cover. Really enjoyed it, actually.


11 posted on 07/08/2014 6:59:48 AM PDT by wideawake
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To: InvisibleChurch

My personal formula ... if a book hasn’t grasped my interest in the first 100 pages the rest goes unread. Often times it’s just a couple of chapters.


12 posted on 07/08/2014 7:01:24 AM PDT by BluH2o
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To: InvisibleChurch

Hillary has the intellect of a three year old, “her” book is worthless.

Piketty’s book is the economics equivalent of that hocky stick glow-bull warming joke.

Let’s not confuse things like that with Stephen Hawking’s book, please.


13 posted on 07/08/2014 7:04:08 AM PDT by Da Coyote
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To: InvisibleChurch

The Brothers Karamazov in my case. I got half through it twice. Its a great book, but man, its a chore to read and follow casually.


16 posted on 07/08/2014 7:11:55 AM PDT by lefty-lie-spy (Stay metal. For the Horde \m/("_")\m/ - via iPhone from Tokyo.)
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To: InvisibleChurch

I can proudly say that, of that lot, I have read exactly none.

But as evidence that I do not lack perseverance, I have actually read “War and Peace” (twice!) AND “Moby Dick.” Furthermore, I enjoyed them both.

On the other hand, I struggled with Dostoevsky and found “Ulysses” (Joyce) unreadable.


17 posted on 07/08/2014 7:12:54 AM PDT by IronJack
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To: InvisibleChurch

Most unreadable books ever:
1.Gravity’s Rainbow- Thomas Pynchon
2.Ulysses- James Joyce
3.Satanic Verses- Rushdie
4.Anything by Umberto Eccho
5. Cryptonomicon- Neal Stephonson


22 posted on 07/08/2014 7:28:18 AM PDT by Hiro Protaginast
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To: InvisibleChurch
I would suggest reading Orwell's Animal Farm and 1984 as well as Jean Raspail's Camp of the Saints as essential to understanding what we face with the Obama administration.

Camp of the Saints depicts an invasion from the third world underclass that ends Western civilization.

31 posted on 07/08/2014 8:01:55 AM PDT by The Great RJ
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To: InvisibleChurch

The only book on this list I’ve read is the “50 Shades” book. I only read it because an old girlfriend compared me to Grey (of which I disagree). I found the book to be horrendously bad and wish I had never read it.


33 posted on 07/08/2014 8:09:41 AM PDT by rfreedom4u (Your feelings don't trump my free speech!)
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To: reed13

War and Peace and some of the other longer classics have been difficult to get through until you’ve built up the character in your head. In some it’s just so much going on that it’s hard to grasp, in others the development just takes a while.

Then there are just the poorly written ones. Atlas shrugged was a hard read for me until 150 pages in then it clicked and things moved on till about 3/4 through when it hit a bit of a wall then it picked up again.


53 posted on 07/08/2014 9:50:03 AM PDT by reed13k (For evil to triumph it is only necessary for good men to do nothings)
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To: InvisibleChurch

I made it through A Brief History of Time just fine. However, Fifty Shades...not so much.


54 posted on 07/08/2014 9:57:24 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (You all can go to hell, I'm going to Texas.)
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To: InvisibleChurch

Bump


57 posted on 07/08/2014 10:07:26 AM PDT by Skooz (Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us)
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To: InvisibleChurch; All
I've read many many books, including most of the Western classics, but one that I just couldn't get through: Mary Shelly's Frankenstein
61 posted on 07/08/2014 10:28:38 AM PDT by notdownwidems (Vote Republican! We're 1/10 of 1% better than the other guys!)
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To: InvisibleChurch
It strikes me that the chosen metric is a little shaky - I do almost no highlighting on my Kindle, and if a book really grips me I don't have time to highlight anyway. The author of the study would conclude I discarded books I really loved.

Nor is it especially fair to measure popular novels such as Catching Fire against popular science pablum such as Hawking's book. They're two entirely different genres. I have highlighted very little of Jonathan Israel's Revolution of the Mind, my evening's project, compared to that unforgettable entire fifth chapter of Naughty Nurses In Bondage, the one with the dyspeptic midget and the circus pony... Note to self: better not hit the Post button on this one...

79 posted on 07/08/2014 7:57:02 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: InvisibleChurch

I encouraged so many friends to read Saul Bellow’s Henderson The Rain King, letting them know that it starts out painfully slow for the first third of the book, but the last two-thirds are just breathtaking.

Everyone put up a stink when I asked about their progress through the book. True enough, they struggled through the beginning of it.

But it was such a joy to see their faces after they had finished it. Every single one of them loved it as much as I do and were glad they persevered through the slow beginning.


80 posted on 07/08/2014 7:59:43 PM PDT by Vision Thing (obama wants his suicidal worshipers to become suicidal bombers.)
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